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thrive

far north

EXPO

Showcasing emerging social enterprises


to help the Far North thrive

Far North Thrive Participants 2015


Alan & Yvonne
Robinson

Whangaroa Reforestation

Ashley Holwell

Whare Bike

Cheryl Toka

Te Hiku Food Hub

Darl Tana

Wawata Ao Marama

David Silberstein

The Dialogue

Estee Rapatini

Nga Kainga Mahana

Harko Brown

Te Mara Hupara

Jackie Thompson

North Hokianga Food Co-operative

Jamie Emery

Kamp Kaitiaki

12

Jean Martin

Project Pukemoho & Hokianga ki te Raki Tourism

12

Jeff Griggs

Re-localising Northlands Food

13

Jenni Kerr

Artisan Beekeeping Co-op

13

Jessica Tuckerman

Wawata Ao Marama

Jo Lumkong

My Green Eye

14

John Maxwell

Russell Recycling & Waste Management

14

Kathryn White

Science in Communities

15

Kevin Rasmussen

Organic Home Food Production

15

Melanie Catanuto

Hua Parakore
Painting & Decorating
YUP I Can

16

Mike Shaw

The Kaikohe Co-operative

17

Monica Tautau

Evolve Alternative Education

17

Murray Lay

Safe Havenz

18

Ramona Cording

Sew and Grow

18

Terry Jones

Whare Bike

6
2

The Thrive Programme


Far North Thrive is a four-month development programme for individuals
with social enterprise ideas. Through face-to-face workshops and coaching
calls, the 24 participants have been learning about social enterprise, how
to start a successful social enterprise, and developing their leadership and
business skills.
Thrive has been specially designed for Far North communities and
delivered in partnership by the kina Foundation and the Far North District
Council, with Foundation North funding support.
The programme is about growing a thriving, innovative, and sustainable
social enterprise sector in Northland. In particular, the participants have:
- Gained an understanding of whether their social enterprise idea is
feasible
- Learnt a range of skills and tools to take their idea forward
- Created a compelling business plan or expanded and tested their idea
- Increased in confidence and capability and built connections within the
local emerging social enterprise network.
The individuals and teams have a diverse range of backgrounds and
experience but all share one thing in common they have an idea to
improve a community in the Far North, care deeply about their community
and wants to make positive and lasting change.
The Expo is designed to showcase their hard work, share learnings from the
journey and provide an opportunity for new supporters to get involved.

Alex Hannant

CEO, kina Foundation


With Far North Thrive, we have set out to support 24 people on a
journey to explore social enterprise and discover their way.
Throughout the four months, punctuated by workshops in
Kerikeri, Rawene, Kaitaia and Kaeo, everyone has worked hard
this has not been a passive experience. And they are now on
their way to turning their ideas into reality.
These are talented and passionate people and they have
strengthened their skills and confidence to make a positive
difference. They also now have each other they are part of a
growing social enterprise network in the Far North.
Undoubtedly, there will be challenges ahead developing an
organisation that is viable and impactful is no mean feat. But the
work will be worthwhile. I am excited about the future of social
enterprise in New Zealand.

John Carter

Mayor, Far North District


Far North District Council is proud to be part of the first Thrive
programme with kina Foundation.
Many communities in New Zealands Far North face social and
economic challenges but it is also a region of breathtaking beauty
and rich natural resources. It has passionate and active people
who understand the challenges and opportunities in the region.
So who is better placed than these locals to kickstart enterprises
that solve social or environmental problems while helping their
communities prosper?
I challenge the wider community to find a way, big or small, they
can contribute to taking these ideas forward. By investing in
people, by building capability and confidence in communities, we
will find solutions to help us thrive.

WHANGAROA
REFORESTATION

Alan and Yvonne Robinson are farmers in the Kaeo river catchment,
keen to reduce flooding in the town and siltation in the area
by planting riparian and marginal land, and encouraging other
landowners to do the same.

Waterways carry debris from eroding hills and farmland, damaging natural
ecosystems, exacerbating floods and polluting the harbour. The Robinsons aim to
help landowners plan the planting of their streams and other non-productive land
and encourage management of swamps to help cleaning water. They hope to
create jobs by establishing local teams for fencing, planting, weed and pest control
and growing the plants in partnership with training providers and employment
agencies.
Alan and Yvonne seek:
Connections with training providers
Nursery connections to provide plants
An acre of sheltered land with water to grow plants.
Contact: Alan and Yvonne on 09 405 0688 or Robinson21@xtra.co.nz

WHARE BIKE

A Community Bicycle
Workshop

Ash Holwell is an artist and bike mechanic who fell in love


with bicycles while living in the Netherlands. He fell into a few
community bike workshops while in Austria and has spent the past
two years working with the people of Whangarei.

Whare Bike takes unwanted bikes from the community and provides tools, parts,
and expertise to allow people to turn them into their own valuable transport means.
Over the past two years, Whare Bike has given away more than 100 bicycles, and
taught countless people how to fix their own bikes. They are part of the Wood
Community Space.
Ash seeks:
Personnel support as mechanics and workshop managers
Administrative support
Funding to cover rent.
Contact: Ash on 022 1517 305 or wharebike@gmail.com
Whare Bike is working with Ride Cycle and is being
supported by CBEC (Terry Jones) and Manaia PHO.

TE HIKU
FOOD HUB

Cheryl Toka is a naturopath and herbalist with extensive experience


in market gardening, community gardens and food co-ops. She is
a supporter of fair trade and organic farmers, an environmentalist
and a passionate organic home gardener.

Te Hiku Food Hub is a community enterprise set up to revitalize the production


of healthy food in the Far North. It co-ordinates the distribution of organic and
spray-free produce from local growers and community gardens, to customers
and charitable organisations. It also arranges for surplus produce to be turned
into value-added artisan foods. Te Hiku Food Hub believes healthy soils, healthy
people.
Cheryl seeks:
Administration and short-term labour costs for set up phase
Horticultural advisor fees
Seed, plant stock, tools and materials for community gardens.
Contact: Cheryl on 0274 305 840 or koanga@slingshot.co.nz

WAWATA AO
MARAMA

A Creative Industries
Professional
Development Agency

Jessica Tuckerman is a public librarian with 10 years experience


in Food,
arts, events
marketing.
She is
is developing
passionate about
community
Farmsand
and
Freshwater
a market
solution
spaces, creativity and culture. Darl Tana has a social work
to financially support and reward New Zealand farmers for
degree, experience in mentoring and is a trustee on marae and
meeting
swimmable
fishableabout
waterwhanau
qualitysupport
objective
other
committees.
Darl isand
passionate
and
community connections.
Jess and Darl believe connected communities are healthy communities and have
been inspired by the volume of traditional and contemporary creative knowledge
in the Far North. Wawata Ao Marama aims to create commercial opportunities for
creative practitioners with profit used for professional development workshops,
developing community creative spaces, and providing programme funding for local
communities. Jess has bought land at Kawakawa for this initiative.

Matariki Sprinkling Stars


by Christchurch-based
artist, Ira Mitchell-Kirk

Jessica and Darl seek:


People interested in building up the small section of land in Kawakawa as a pilot
project space
Website design and development, plus computer training space, with internet
access
Arts partners and creative practitioners.
Contact: Jessica on 0204 036 8521 or Darl on 0211 820 372
Wawata.Ao.Marama@gmail.com
https://www.facebook.com/Wawata.Ao.Marama

THE
DIALOGUE

David Silberstein is committed to enhancing family harmony


through communication that creates common understanding. He
has designed and facilitated training for Corrections and CYF and
has a Masters degree in social work. He lives in Kohukohu.

The Dialogue is a structured conversation that creates a safe space for emotionally
charged family issues to be authentically talked about, creating new understandings
and perspectives to emerge, free from blame and judgment. The Dialogue supports
self-responsibility and accountability and helps the family create new agreements
for aligned action. David is committed to changing the way families interact thereby
reducing family stress and violence.
David seeks:
Experts in crowd-funding, website design and social media
Funding to reach 100% of counsellors, social workers, whanau workers and
mental health workers to teach them how to facilitate The Dialogue with their
clients throughout New Zealand.
Contact: David on 027 270 5704 or silberstein.david@gmail.com

NGA KAINGA
MAHANA

Estee Rapatini is passionate about growing healthy sustainable


whanau, part of a healthy sustainable community and country.
This starts on the whenua, in healthy homes, with rebuilt whanau
connections and encouraging tamariki to be all they can be.

In the Far North, many whanau live in overcrowded, unhealthy, substandard living
conditions, linked to serious health problems such as rheumatic fever, tuberculosis,
mental illness and meningitis. Many whanau want to return to their homeland, but
developing housing on Mori freehold land is challenging. This initiative creates
opportunities for whanau to form partnerships to develop and support other
community groups to develop sustainable housing for the benefit of the Far North.
Estee seeks:
Kaumatua to assist with tikanga, people with knowledge of Te Tiriti o Waitangi
Whanau trusts and community groups with an interest in papakainga and
sustainable housing and permaculture
Provider of ecological features, recyclable materials
Architects, designers, builders and funders.
Contact: Estee on 021 1144 093 or shicdrifalesalay14@gmail.com

TE MARA
HUPARA

Hupara Gardens

Harko Brown is the Director of KaiMatariki Charitable Trust,


charged with getting people active and involved with cultural
spaces and traditional recreation. Harko consults for and speaks
at sports trusts, marae, health organisations and universities. He
has an Honours degree in social sciences and Masters in sports
and leisure studies.

Harko is passionate about nga taonga takaro (traditional Mori games) and their
contemporary uses as resources in education and sport. One aro-takaro is the
hupara, a sawn and decorated log. Hupara in gardens, parks, gullies and reserves
create linger points to increase the use and appreciation of these places. They
bring benefits to a community through promoting exercise like taichi or childrens
playgrounds, as places of contemplation or outdoor classrooms, for picnics or
telling stories, and gives artists opportunities to publicise their talent.
Harko seeks:
Funding for or donation of 20 hupara and paint for their decoration
Installation and signage in a Far North community garden
Workshop bookings by district councils, government departments and
community leaders.
Contact: Harko on 021 113 8164 or kaimatariki@gmail.com

NORTH
HOKIANGA FOOD
CO-OPERATIVE

After 30 years living in the community, it was attending a


Food, Farms
and Freshwater
is at
developing
a market
community
development
workshop
Motuti Marae
in 2013 solution
that
prompted
Jackiesupport
Thompson
to reward
act. SheNew
saw an
opportunity
to help
to financially
and
Zealand
farmers
for
themeeting
North Hokianga
survive
economically,
environmentally,
socially,
swimmable and fishable water quality objective
culturally and to improve health and wellbeing.

The North Hokianga Food Co-operative is a collaborative network that integrates


sustainable hapu-led food production ventures with local processing, distribution
and consumption in order to enhance the economic and social health of the takiwa.
A Hokianga food hub will secure the local food system for the future, increasing
access to fresh healthy food for whanau and helping provide wider access to
markets for producers. It is designed to benefit all North Hokianga whanau. The
first major venture is development of a local abattoir to process meat.
Jackie seeks:
Technical advice and help developing a Risk Management Plan
Legal/financial planning advice for ideal co-operative structure
Kick-start financial support.
Contact: Jackie on 021 162 7194 or J4CK13@xtra.co.nz

77 Te Huahua Road, RD1, Kohukohu, 0453

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11

KAMP KAITIAKI

Jamie Emery is a youth mentor. She is studying for a Bachelor of


Applied Social Work to be in better position to serve and support the
youth who reside in the Doubtless Bay and immediate rural area.

Kamp Kaitiaki is an idea in response to a lack of opportunities for youth, particularly


those living rurally and from low socio-economic backgrounds. Kamp Kaitiaki
offers a safe weekend away for youth to engage respectfully with one another
and co-create programmes and activities around the issues that affect them in
Doubtless Bay. The goal is to help develop young adults who are more connected
and engaged in the future community, who can manage themselves, support one
another and protect the environment.
Jamie seeks:
Programme designers, youth facilitators and programme ideas already working
well for youth
Camp venue for weekends
Funding to assist with camps and sponsors for students who need it.
Contact: Jamie on 0210794209 or jamietemery@gmail.com

PROJECT
PUKEMOHO &
HOKIANGA KI TE
RAKI TOURISM

Jean Martin has been active in her communitys development since


2005. She is passionate about helping to repopulate and rebuild
her community. Jean is adamant that they cant rely on others and
while they lack money, they have the natural resources, skills and
ability to help themselves.

Jean wants to create sustainable employment opportunities using local skills and
natural resources and to provide good quality affordable housing. Her vision is: to
build our community to enable our people to return home to live and work on the
land left to us by our tupuna. She has developed Project Pukemoho and Hokianga
Ki Te Raki Tourism (formerly Motuti Tourism). A tourism venture will be relaunched
with a new name and new website in September.
Jean seeks:
Advice on becoming a housing provider, marketing and tourism
Support at local, regional and central government levels
Funding for wages, marketing, office overheads.
Contact: Jean on 09 408 1321, 09 4095 545, 020 4025 0626 or
j.martin@motuti.co.nz
www.motuti.co.nz

12

RE-LOCALISING
NORTHLANDS
FOOD

Jeff has a background in strategic planning, group facilitation,


project implementation, relationship management, sustainability
advocacy, and coaching collaborative leadership at regional and
central government, and local community levels.

Northlands food systems have become unsustainable with local-growing


decimated and supermarkets dominating. People often travel long distances to
access food, plus rely on over-processed foods leaving them under-nourished with
rises in preventable disease. They want to establish community led-sustainable
food systems for Northland that will produce, add value, market and distribute
locally grown nutritious food, supporting the health of the community and economy
while looking after the environment.
Jeff seeks:
Access to surplus infrastructure including buildings and land
Training in horticulture, small business development and food safety
Mentoring and financial support (loans, grants, micro-finance) for small business
start ups and to establish staff, infrastructure and training
Support for healthy food demonstrations and sourcing local fresh food for
hospital meals
Involvement of farmers markets, co-ops and marae to support food distribution.
Contact: Jeff on 09 435 1759 or Jeffgriggsnz@gmail.com or PO Box 890, Whangarei

ARTISAN
BEEKEEPING
CO-OP

I love keeping bees, says Jenni Kerr of North Hokianga. Beehives


Farmssocial
and Freshwater
is co-operating,
developing aour
market
areFood,
the original
enterprise! By
local solution
economy
can begin
buzzing
likereward
a good New
beehive.
So Jenni
is for
to financially
support
and
Zealand
farmers
developing
a
co-operative
model
of
artisan
beekeeping,
resilient
meeting swimmable and fishable water quality objective
against production and market challenges.

Artisan Beekeeping Co-op is about caring for bees and the community so both may
thrive. Theyre developing an enabling model: resilient against production and
market challenges; sharing information, talents, resources to make hives affordable;
learning best care for bees; starting with several hives and a mentor to gain skills.
Theyre researching niche markets to build the community and circulate wealth
within it over the long term.

Jennis husband Shem


showing visitors the inner
workings of a beehive.

Jenni seeks:
Timber suitable for hives
Supply colonies of bees
Mentors to support beginners and people keen to join a beekeeping co-op.
Contact: Jenni on 09 409 5582, 027 274 0234 or shemjen@inspire.net.nz

13

MY GREEN EYE

Jo Lumkong is an artist and designer with 15+ years practical


experience in the USA and NZ. From her home in Kerikeri, she
collaborates with local artists, makers and manufacturers to design
interiors, jewellery, home decor and furniture products.

My Green Eye grew out of Jos desire to source unique and innovative design
products. The central philosophy is that collaborative, creative communities
will enable Northland to realise its greater potential. Often creative practitioners
and manufacturers are separated by distance, creative differences or competing
business structures My Green Eye is about economies of scale. Her vision is to
create a recognised, quality local brand to be sold on the national and international
market creating alternative revenue streams for existing business, employment
opportunities and adding value to natural resources.
Jo seeks:
Connections with local manufacturers, makers and artists interested in
participating in collaborative, creative experimentation
Mentorship or assistance with scalable business modelling, systems design,
distribution, export and marketing.
Contact: Jo on 027 267 3688 or jo@mygreen-i.nz

RUSSELL
RECYCLING
AND WASTE
MANAGEMENT

The driving force behind the plan is John Maxwell, a resident of


Russell for more than 35 years. John kick-started this idea two
years ago at a Russell Future Plan meeting. He wants to see a
community-owned and operated waste management and recycling
business.

Following the Far North District Councils call for Zero Waste in the Far North, John
Maxwell was inspired to investigate the possibility of a community-owned and
operated waste management and recycling business for the Russell Peninsula.
With the help of Kaitaias CBEC, they were on track to create a worthwhile
community enterprise but the waste management contract was granted elsewhere.
So John and his small band of dedicated Russell volunteers have decided to go it
alone.
John seeks:
More volunteers who can see the potential
A suitable site with three phase power
Finance for a small truck and trailer, two-side opening shipping containers, a
press capable of compacting bales of recyclable material.
Contact: John on 09 403 7178 or maxwelljohn1006@gmail.com

14

SCIENCE IN
COMMUNITIES

Kathryn White is a marine, estuarine and environmental researcher


passionate about teaching science. She has taught students from
preschool up to university, designed and delivered workshops for
teachers and implemented a biotech loaner lab in the U.S. Kathryn
has been working with Russell School to improve STEM education.

An ERO report (May 2012) found that only three out of 100 schools surveyed
had science programmes that were considered highly effective, while less than
two-thirds were considered partially effective. The main goal of Science InC is to
improve STEM education in Northland primary schools it recognises learning
to be scientists is more than just learning science. Science InC plans loaner
lab programmes, teacher workshops, fully packaged STEM study modules, and
increasing Citizen Science in local communities.
Kathryn seeks support for phase one of the loaner lab programme, More Than
Meets the Eye, with funding needed for five schools to participate in Zebrafish
Embryology Study:
20 dissecting microscopes ($5,000)
Five fish tanks, with equipment and fish ($400/tank)
Travel costs.
Contact: Kathryn on 022 601 8621 or scienceincommunities@gmail.com

ORGANIC
HOME FOOD
PRODUCTION

Kevin
Rasmussen
of the
Rainbow Hills
SustainableaFutures
Food,
Farms and
Freshwater
is developing
marketTrust
solution
has a passion to help people grow their own healthy organic food.
to financially support and reward New Zealand farmers for
Kevin has been teaching organic horticulture in the mainstream
meeting
swimmable
fishable
tertiary
education
systemand
for the
past 10water
years.quality objective

There is no dedicated community education in organic home food production in the


Far North. Kevin has found there are many people who want to grow their own food
organically and sustainably, but dont have skill, lack confidence or just cant enrol
on a full time course. Kevin hopes to provide a month-to-month service to growing
your own food in the Far North that anybody can join no matter the circumstances,
whether they are full time workers or with young families on a budget. Seasonal
fresh produce even on the home scale provides food security, sustainability and
health benefits.
Kevin seeks:
Financial assistance for transport
Participants/supporters.
Contact: Kevin on 09 405 7654 or kevinrasmussen4@hotmail.com

Rainbow Hills Sustainable Futures Trust, PO Box 126, Rawene 0443

15

NGATI RANGI
DEVELOPMENT
SOCIETY
INCORPORATED

Ngati Rangi Development Society CEO Melanie Catanuto is working


with a team to progress three ideas to strengthen the region.

Melanie returned home to NZ in 2008 when her father died and rediscovered the
underlying beauty and issues in Northland. Her father had explained that one day
she would apply her lifes learnings to help her people prosper. At the time she
didnt understand but since becoming CEO at Ngati Rangi, has put her professional
experience as an accountant and fund and asset manager to work.
Melanie is working with a diverse team across the three ideas, including Te Iwi Puihi
Tipene, Michael Manuel, Boydie Simeon, Robert Downing, Doug Arneil, Monti and
Mark Tito, Mike Shaw, Mike and Ellen Bennett, and Naine Heremaia.

HUA
PARAKORE

Supplying the local community


with kai (food) and rongoa
(medicine) via native seedling
production for riparian planting

PAINTING &
DECORATING

Providing a local and quality


painting and decorating service
to local schools, council and
homes in Northland, plus
helping employee students

YUP I CAN

An evidence-based app that


showcases individuals skills,
not just formal qualifications,
and brings CVs to life.

Melanie seeks:
Seed funding and phase one and two funding
Writer for the business plan
Marketing expertise
IT app developer and web developer
Lawyer contract and IP.
Contact: Melanie on 09 215 0778, 021 674 644 or
Melanie.Catanuto@NgatiRangiTaiamai.iwi.nz

16

THE KAIKOHE
CO-OPERATIVE

Mike Shaw is a church leader in Kaikohe. Hes passionate about


community transformation and resilience and is motivated by
Zechariah 1:17 My towns will again overflow with prosperity.

When floods took out SH1 south of Kawakawa in 2014, the region came within hours
of a state of emergency and food rationing. Local growers and suppliers havent
kept up with international alliances. The Kaikohe Co-operative seeks to change
that by growing and supplying local food that is fresher, higher quality, healthier,
competitively priced, creates employment, keeps dollars in the community and
builds community resilience. Starting with food and local milk deliveries, the model
has the potential to transform the economic fortunes of the town into a prosperous
and thriving community in control of its future.
Mike seeks:
Growers to participate, marketing advice, and experts for the start-up board
Consumer shareholders to pilot the start-up phase
Start-up capital.
Contact: Mike on 021 084 2302 or mike@heartofthenorth.co.nz

EVOLVE
ALTERNATIVE
EDUCATION

Monica
Tim and
Tautau
are the people
behind Evolve.
Tim issolution
a
Food,and
Farms
Freshwater
is developing
a market
youth worker, builder, beekeeper, land cultivator and assistant
to financially support and reward New Zealand farmers for
director by trades. Monica is a youth worker, social worker and
meetingmaker.
swimmable
and fishable
water
quality
objective
restaurant
They believe
Knowledge
+ Awhi
= Freedom.

Tim and Monica have teamed up with a qualified teacher, and together they are all
united in their passion to provide a teaching alternative for youngsters who have
been excluded from the mainstream education system for varying reasons. They
recognise that some children are out-of-the-box thinkers and engage with learning
through a more kinaesthetic style of teaching, using all the senses. They aim to
significantly raise literacy levels within Muriwhenua and help young people of the
Far North to have dreams and goals for their future.
Monica seeks:
Business mentoring and advice about setting up an alternative education
programme
Funding for expansion.
Contact: Monica on 021 087 53177, Tim on 021 717 633 or tim.tautau@gmail.com

17

SAFE HAVENZ

Murray and Serafina Lay have been developing their own five acre
Safe Haven park and garden on the outskirts of Kaitaia for the past
10 years and now wish to share it as an overnight experience - an
Air BnB for campervans at private properties.

Every province throughout NZ is challenged by a campervan boom (numbers


increasing by 20,000 per annum) and with that comes health and safety of
campers and waste issues. They wish to provide safe, privately-owned, overnight
parking for foreign campervan tourists within Safe Havenz regions with a network
of small, quality, privately-owned properties. They are developing a manual to set
standards for individual Safe Havenz operators. For a small fee, operators will gain
passive incomes from their lifestyle farmlets and seaside properties offering tourists
a unique NZ experience.
Murray seeks:
Safe Havenz member properties to join including rural, seaside, riverside,
harbour, forest edge, walking track locality, marae, special gardens
District and regional council contacts
Tourism New Zealand contact to demonstrate the value of these tourism
opportunities.
Contact: Murray on 021 268 1413, 09 408 4968 or malay@slingshot.co.nz

SEW AND GROW

Ramona Cording is a self-taught fashion designer who is passionate


about keeping the tradition of teaching teenagers how to sew alive
and well in the Far North. She has been prompted to act after
learning sewing technology is no longer a subject in most high
schools around NZ.

Sew and Grow is a social enterprise idea designed to teach anyone, from ages 8 to
80, to sew. Classes for youth, adolescents and adults will be aimed at growing skills
and confidence in self sufficient fashion and design. Teaching teenagers is a big
focus as it is an important self awareness age; giving them the ability to craft skills
they can apply directly to their lives can empower a sense of achievement.
Ramona seeks:
Donated sewing machines and tools
Support with starting up OSCAR programmes and teaching in schools
Funding for renting a Kaeo building with potential for a Sewing Cafe and onsite
workshop and gallery.
Contact: Ramona on 021 078 4358 or info@sewandgrow.nz
https://www.facebook.com/sewgrow

18

Te Aroha
Te aroha
Te whakapono
Me te rangimarie
Tatou tatou e
Te aroha
Te whakapono
Me te rangimarie
Tatou tatou e

Love
Faith
And peace
Be amongst us all

Far North Thrive Expo


Friday 21 August 2015
Kerikeri RSA
3.00-3.15pm

Welcome

3.15-3.45pm

Speeches

3.45pm-4.00pm

Overview of
participants

4.00-5.00pm

Meet the teams,


networking and
refreshments

5.00-6.00pm

Open to public

For more info about Thrive:


akina.org.nz
ph 04 384 9676
info@akina.org.nz

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